Integrated circuit failure prediction

ABSTRACT

An integrated circuit having a frequency generator connected to a constant reference voltage source located on the integrated circuit and a monitor connected to monitor the frequency signal and from the frequency history predicting that an integrated circuit failure will occur. An adaptive power supply is disclosed that includes a frequency generator connected to a bandgap voltage source and is monitored for changes in the frequency generator output. From this change a prediction is made as to that a failure condition will occur.

RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is related to the following co-pending U.S. patent applications filed on the same day as the present application and having the same assignee: “On-Chip Adaptive Voltage Compensation,” Ser. No. 11/671,485; “Using Temperature Data for Instruction Thread Direction,” Ser. No. 11/671,640; “Using Performance Data for Instruction Thread Direction,” Ser. No. 11/671,627; “Using IR Drop Data for Instruction Thread Direction,” Ser. No. 11/671,613; “Instruction Dependent Dynamic Voltage Compensation,” Ser. No. 11/671,579; “Temperature Dependent Voltage Source Compensation,” Ser. No. 11/671,568; “Fan Speed Control from Adaptive Voltage Supply,” Ser. No. 11/671,555; and “Digital Adaptive Voltage Supply,” Ser. No. 11/671,531; each assigned to the IBM Corporation and herein incorporated by reference.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

1. Technical Field

The present invention relates in general to a system and method for predicting failure. In particular, the present invention relates to a system and method for monitoring a frequency generator connected to a constant reference voltage source and determining from the changes of the frequency when a failure condition will occur.

2. Description of the Related Art

Integrated circuit reliability has always been important. However it is difficult to predict the failure of an integrated circuit. Obviously, in highly reliable systems, being able to project the failure of components is important.

Power supplies have always been considered critical components electronic systems. Failure of a power supply often means failure of the entire system. Therefore maintaining the reliability of a power supply is very important to ensure were liable system operation. Reliability of power supplies becomes even more important in low-power electronics systems since monitoring and replacing power supplies is not practical. In the past, in order to make power supplies more reliable, a common technique was to over design the power supply. In other words, provide more capability than is required by the system. With the advancements in integrated circuit technology, it is possible to provide multiple power supplies on a single integrated circuit providing power to functional sections of this integrated circuit. Therefore it would be desirable to have a means to monitor the performance of these power supplies in order to properly maintain the electronic systems.

SUMMARY

In accordance with the present invention, an integrated circuit is provided that includes a frequency generator connected to a constant reference voltage source located on the integrated circuit and providing a frequency signal which is monitored to predict when a condition failure on the integrated circuit will occur.

In one embodiment of the present invention, a failure prediction capability is provided for an adaptive power supply. The adaptive power supply measures temperature, frequency response performance and IR drop in order to scale the output of the power supply. In measuring the frequency response performance and IR drop, ring oscillators are used. One of the ring oscillator's is connected to a bandgap voltage source which is a constant reference voltage source on the integrated circuit itself. By monitoring the output of this ring oscillator and comparing this output to previously measured outputs, a prediction can be made as to the future failure of the integrated circuit.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The present invention may be better understood, and its numerous objects, features, and advantages made apparent to those skilled in the art by referencing the accompanying drawings.

FIG. 1 is a schematic diagram of a simple embodiment of the temperature measurement circuit;

FIG. 2 is a schematic diagram of a second embodiment of the temperature measurement circuit;

FIG. 3 is a schematic diagram of the two ring oscillator circuit that provides input for the frequency response measurement and provides the IR drop measurement;

FIG. 4 is a schematic diagram of the preferred embodiment of the adaptive voltage compensation circuit;

FIG. 5 is a flow chart representing the operation of the adaptive voltage compensation circuit;

FIG. 6 is a block diagram of a digital implementation of the adaptive voltage compensation circuit;

FIG. 7 is a second and more detailed block diagram of the implementation of FIG. 6;

FIG. 8 is an illustration of the location of adaptive voltage compensation circuits on multiple cores;

FIG. 9 is flow diagram illustrating how programmable control is provided to the adaptive voltage compensation circuit;

FIG. 10 is a flow diagram illustrated the failure prediction process; and

FIG. 11 is a flow diagram illustrating a second embodiment of the failure prediction process.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

The following is intended to provide a detailed description of an example of the invention and should not be taken to be limiting of the invention itself. Rather, any number of variations may fall within the scope of the invention, which is defined in the claims following the description.

The present invention provides a system to predict a failure condition. This is actually accomplished by providing an adaptive power supply (APS) for each central processing unit. Each of these adaptive power supplies determines operating conditions on an integrated circuit and adjust voltage (Vdd) provided to the integrated circuit to either increase performance of the integrated circuit or save power expended by the integrated circuit and includes failure prediction capability to be discussed.

In a preferred embodiment of these adaptive power supplies, three physical condition measurements are made. The first is temperature, which is measured by a thermal diode on the surface of the integrated circuit. The second is the IR (voltage) drop measured by two ring oscillator circuits and the third is the frequency performance of the integrated circuit measured by a single loop oscillator compared to stored predetermined performance values.

The complete control signal provided to the voltage regulation circuit is:

Total Vdd scaling=Frequency response scaling+Temperature related Vdd scaling+IR drop related scaling

All of the measurement circuits are contained on the surface of this integrated circuit device in the preferred embodiment. These measurements are then used to scale an input control signal to a voltage regulation circuit also contained on the surface of the integrated circuit device or alternatively on another integrated circuit. The output of this voltage regulation device provides the integrated circuit operating voltage (Vdd). Thus the voltage supplied to the integrated circuit can be adjusted to either save power or increase performance dynamically during the operation of the chip by under program control. Further the integrated circuit voltage and, therefore, performance can be changed in anticipation of operating environment changes such as a sleep state or the execution of instructions requiring high circuit performance.

This is a dynamic method of varying voltage that takes into account the specifics of the semiconductor manufacturing process, temperature and IR drop effects simultaneously. This method uses available on-chip data to compute adjustment in voltage necessary to either meet target performance or decrease power consumption. The two goals are met using the same circuit. Another advantage of using this method is the flexibility it offers to the users in terms of programmability. On chip voltage can be artificially varied by writing into special registers which provide values used by the power management circuitry to provide the supply voltage Vdd. This feature can be helpful when expecting instructions that require high circuit performance, essentially providing an “on-Demand” performance capability. In other words, to provide on request, additional circuit supply voltage to increase circuit performance.

This method is not limited to a specific technology or type of circuit. It can be applied to a broad type of integrated circuits, especially those that need to deliver higher performance at lower power consumption.

This method also offers reduction in test time for identifying yield and voltage per module. It is a dynamic solution unlike previous static solutions (fuses, etc) that takes into account effects of IR drop.

FIG. 1 is a schematic diagram of one embodiment of the thermal measurement circuit 125 shown connected to the voltage regulation circuit which provides the integrated circuit voltage source (Chip Vdd). This measurement circuit includes a current source 100 connected to the voltage source. This current source 100 is also connected by a line 103 to a thermal diode 102 also connected to ground. The voltage across the thermal diode 102 indicates the measured temperature of this integrated circuit. This thermal voltage signal is provided over line 103 to an analog comparator 106. The output of the comparator 106 is connected to an address counter 110 providing an address to a digital to analog (D to A) converter 114. The operating range for a thermal diode is commonly zero to 125° C. The address counter 110 includes a look up table with 128 entries. These entries correspond to 0° C. to 127° C. Initially, the address counter 110 starts at zero degrees and increments upward each clock cycle. Each address is provided to the D to A converter 114 over line 112. In operation, the analog comparator 106 compares the output of the D to A converter 114 with the measured thermal voltage provided by the thermal diode 102. When the address counter 110 provides an output representing the same temperature as the thermal diode 102, the output voltage from the D to A converter 110 will be the same voltage as that provided by the thermal diode 102. The output of the analog comparator 106 will then be zero. The address counter 110 will then stop incrementing and provide a signal over line 116 to a delay lookup table (LUT) circuit 118. This value on line 116 is a digital signal representing the temperature measured by the thermal diode 102. This thermal voltage value is used to address a corresponding delay value in the delay lookup table circuit 118. The delay lookup table in circuit 118 is a table of pulse width values computed by a simulation of the performance of the integrated circuit. Each value represents the expected delay value computed for the temperature range of 0° C. to 127° C. for expected integrated circuit performance.

To measure the process on the substrate, a ring oscillator connected to a temperature compensated voltage source (ex: a bandgap reference) is used. In this case, for a given temperature, the pulse width produced by the ring oscillator is a function of the process on the substrate since temperature and voltage are constant. By using a bandgap reference, the voltage applied to a ring oscillator can be kept constant. But the temperature of the substrate depends upon internal and external operating conditions and it cannot be held constant. To eliminate the effects of varying temperature, another scheme is used in this invention.

First, a target predicted circuit performance number (pcpn) is chosen. This number represents the expected circuit performance based on expected semiconductor manufacturing process. This number represents circuit performances expected under nominal applied voltage across the entire operating temperature range. For this pcpn, a simulation of the ring oscillator supplied by a constant voltage from a bandgap reference is carried out for the entire operating temperature range. This simulation yields pulse widths that are generated at a fixed voltage and pcpn values where only the temperature is varied across the entire operating temperature range. If the substrate pcpn is identical to the desired target performance, then the substrate would also yield identical pulse widths for each value of the operating temperature range.

If the substrate pcpn is different than the desired target performance, then the pulse widths produced by the substrate will be either shorter or longer than those produced by simulation depending upon whether the substrate pcpn was faster or slower than the desired target performance. So a comparison has to be made between the pulse width generated by the ring oscillator on the substrate with a simulated value of the pulse with at the value of the substrate temperature at a fixed voltage. The expected pulse width values at the desired target process for each temperature value within the desired operating temperature range are stored in a Look Up Table (LUT) (for example, 118 in FIG. 1) that is addressed by the current substrate temperature, i.e. based on the substrate temperature, the address pointer points to an entry in the LUT that contains the expected pulse width from the ring oscillator circuit at the desired process corner at a fixed bandgap voltage. For this invention, the operating temperature range is 0° C. to 127° C. and this range is divided into 128 steps of 1° C. each. This requires 128 entries in the LUT, one entry corresponding to each 1° C. rise in temperature.

This resulting pulse width value from the delay lookup table circuit 118 provides a voltage scaling signal in digital form which is converted to an analog voltage signal by D to A converter 122. This scaling voltage signal is provided to a voltage regulator 130 over line 124. The operation result of the circuit 125 would be to increase or decrease the resulting voltage of regulator circuit 130 (chip Vdd) based upon the measured temperature of the integrated circuit measured by thermal diode 102.

FIG. 2 is a second embodiment of the thermal measurement circuit illustrated in FIG. 1. The temperature measurement circuit 225 of FIG. 2 includes two current sources 200 and 202 which are selectively connected to a thermal diode 208 through a switch 204 connected by line 206. The diode is actually made up of a lateral PNP device fabricated in CMOS technology. The collector and base of this device are shorted leaving the diode between base and emitter.

Digital temperature sensors are based on the principle that the base-emitter voltage, V_(BE), of a diode-connected transistor is inversely proportional to its temperature. When operated over temperature, V_(BE) exhibits a negative temperature coefficient of approximately −2 mV/° C. In practice, the absolute value of V_(BE) varies from transistor to transistor. To nullify this variation, the circuit would have to calibrate each individual transistor. A common solution to this problem is to compare the change in V_(BE) of the transistor when two different current values are applied to the emitter of the transistor.

Temperature measurements are made using a diode that is fed by 2 current sources, one at a time. Typically the ratio of these current sources is 10:1. The temperature measurement requires measuring the difference in voltage across the diode produced by applying two current sources.

Line 206 is connected to a “sample and hold” circuit 209 to sample and hold a voltage output of the thermal diode 208. The address counter circuit 222 operates identically to the address counter, circuit 110 of FIG. 1 previously discussed. Address counter circuit 222 increments an address every clock cycle which provides a digital signal representing the temperature range of 0° C. to 127° C. over line 220 to the D to A converter 218 which converts this digital signal representing temperature to a voltage. This voltage signal is provided on line 215 to a second sample and hold circuit 213. Both the sample of the hold circuits 209 and 213 will sample and hold their respective voltages for the comparator 212 so that continuing small variations in temperature from the thermal diode 208 will not adversely affect the operation of this temperature measurement circuit 225. Upon reaching the measured temperature, the comparator 212 will provide a zero output over line 216 to the address counter 222 which provides a digital signal representing the measured temperature on line 224 to the delay lookup table circuit 226. The operation of the delay lookup table circuit 226 providing a digital delay value on line 228 to the D to A converter 230 is the same as previously discussed for the measurement circuitry 125 in FIG. 1.

FIG. 3 is a schematic diagram of the IR drop measurement circuit 325 which provides voltage scaling signal to a voltage regulator circuit 326. A band gap voltage source 300 is connected to a ring oscillator circuit 304. The ring oscillator circuit 304 consists of an odd number of inverters 302 connected in a loop or ring. The band gap source is obtained from the physical integrated circuit itself and is nominally 1.23 volts. A second ring oscillator circuit 306 connected to the chip voltage source provides an output on line 314. The band gap ring oscillator provides an output on line 312. A phase detector 308 is connected to lines 312 and 314 to determine the difference or delay between the pulses provided by the two ring oscillator circuits 304 and 306. The phase detector 308 provides a voltage magnitude output and a voltage polarity output on lines 316 and 318 respectively which in combination represent the delay difference between the ring oscillator circuits 304 and 306. Lines 316 and 318 are input to a comparator 310 which provides a voltage scaling signal on line 322 to the voltage regulator 326. It should be understood that this voltage scaling signal on line 322 is based solely upon the IR drop of the integrated circuit. Based on the voltage scaling signal of line 322, voltage regulator 326 provides the appropriate chip Vdd value. In the preferred embodiment, the two ring oscillator circuits 304 and 306 should be located in close proximity to each other so that the effects of any irregularities across the surface of the integrated circuit will be minimized.

The frequency response of the integrated circuit (or performance of the integrated circuit) can be measured by using the output of a band gap voltage connected ring oscillator 304 on line 305 of FIG. 3 and the lookup table containing known delay values based on chip temperature from circuit 226 of FIG. 2. This is illustrated in combination with the IR drop measurement of circuit 325 and the temperature measurement of circuit 225 in FIG. 4. In the IR drop measurement circuit 325, the band gap connected ring oscillator 304 provides a second signal connected to an integrator circuit 414, which takes the pulse signal from the band gap connected ring oscillator 304 of circuit 325 and converts it into a voltage which is then provided to difference circuit 416. Another input line 415 to the difference circuit 416 is compared to the delay voltage signal output from the D to A converter 230 representing the expected delay based on the measured temperature. The output of this difference circuit 416 represents a voltage indicative of the integrated circuit frequency response or performance of the integrated circuit. More specifically, this signal provided to multiplexer 418 represents the actual integrated circuit performance compared to the expected integrated circuit performance for that temperature. If the expected delay signal on line 415 is less than the delay signal from integrator circuit 414, the chip is performing below expectations and the voltage Vdd should be increased. Conversely, if the expected delay on line 415 is greater than the delay signal from integrator circuit 414, the chip is performing above expectations and the voltage Vdd could be lowered to save power.

FIG. 4 also illustrates the preferred embodiment of the invention combining the temperature measurement circuit 325 output, the JR drop measurement circuit 325 output with the frequency response measurement as discussed above. In this embodiment, the temperature measurement circuit includes a lookup table address register 400 connected to the address counter 210 by line 402 to provide an initial address or to provide an artificially changed temperature that would result in an artificially changed voltage scaling signal. Also, the lookup table data register 406 is provided that may provide a directed input into the delay lookup table 226 shown in block 450 where block 450 also contains other circuit elements for frequency response measurement. This can be used to provide entries into the delay lookup table or provide bypass data output directly to multiplexer 410 which is input to the D to A converter 230. In this manner, a programmer could directly control the delay value, which is used to compute the voltage scaling signal on line 428. The output of the D to A converter 230 is provided on line 415 directly to the difference circuit 416 and to the multiplexer 418. In this manner the multiplexer 418 may bypass the difference circuit 416 and only provide the temperature dependant table delay value to the driver 420. The driver 420 is connected to a register 408 by line 438 which can be used to control the amount of signal output on line 424 to the summing circuit 426. Likewise, in circuit 325, register 432 provides on line 434, a signal that can be used to vary the amount of the scaling signal output from the circuit 325 to the summing circuit 426. The output from summing circuit 426 is the voltage scaling signal on line 428 and is provided to the voltage regulator 436 which in turn provides the integrated circuit voltage (chip Vdd) 440.

FIG. 5 is a process flow chart representing the operation of the invention. It is important understand, that FIG. 5 is not a flow chart representing software execution but of a simultaneous process producing the voltage scaling signal previously discussed in the operation of the different functional units of the present invention. The discussion of this flowchart of FIG. 5 will also reference FIGS. 2, 3 and 4 respectively. In the start phase 500, path 524 illustrates the simultaneous operation of the different aspects of this invention. In step 502, the thermal diode 208 provides an output voltage indicating the measured circuit temperature on line 506 to process block 504. Process block 504 represents the operation of the address counter 222, the D to A converter 218 and the voltage comparator 212 (of FIG. 2) in determining a digital signal representative of the circuit temperature as previously discussed. Referring to FIG. 5, this digital temperature is provided on path 530 to the delay lookup table in step 506 which provides a digital signal representative of the delay on path 534 to the D to A conversion step 508 resulting in the delay signal voltage provided to the comparator 514 over path 536.

Returning to path 524, the frequency response value measured in block 510 is provided in path 528 to both the integration block 512 and to the compare block 520 by line 538 as discussed in FIG. 4. The integration circuit 414 of FIG. 4 provides the frequency response measurement signal to the compare block 514 over path 542 which is then compared to the delay signal on path 536. This result of this comparison is provided on path 544. Returning to path 524, the measurement of the IR drop from the ring oscillator 306 connected to the chip voltage supply is compared with the ring oscillator 304 connected to the band gap voltage source in step 520. The output on path 540 represents the IR drop portion of the voltage scaling signal and is combined in step 516 to produce the overall voltage scaling signal 546 provided to the regulator 436 in step 522. It is important understand that this voltage scaling signal results from the combination of the measurements for temperature, IR drop and circuit frequency response.

Digital Implementation of the Adaptive Voltage Supply

FIG. 6 is a block diagram of an embodiment of the digital adaptive voltage supply. Block 604 represents the temperature sensor previously discussed in FIGS. 1, 2 and 4. Register 600 provides an address into the temperature sensor tables, as previously discussed. The output of the temperature sensor block 604 on line 606 is provided to the pulse width table 608. This table 608 is also connected by line 622 to a data register 610. The data register 610 provides the ability to input a value into either the pulse width table 608 or to the multiplexer 612. In this manner, the adaptive power management unit 622 may provide inputs into data register 610 which is substituted by a multiplexer 612 for a pulse width value. In other words, a computer program providing control of the operation of the adaptive power management unit 622 can directly control the value in the data register 610 and thus indirectly control the voltage scaling computation from this point in the block diagram.

The bandgap reference circuit 618 and the Vdd reference circuit 632 are similar to those discussed and illustrated as block 325 in FIG. 4. However, the output of the bandgap reference circuit 618 and chip Vdd reference circuit 632 are combined in a difference circuit 642 that provides an output on line 640. The bandgap reference circuit 618 also provides an output that is combined with the output from the multiplexer 612 in the difference circuit 665. This difference circuit 665 provides an output on line 667.

One distinction from the adaptive voltage supply illustrated in FIG. 4 is the inclusion of the process sensor registers 676 connected to line 667 and the JR drop register 647 connected to line 640. Since the data on lines 667 and 640 are digital, these registers 676 and 647 may receive the values on these lines respectively. Alternatively, register 676 can receive an input on line 680 as can register 647 receive an input on line 637. In other words, both these registers are read/write registers. Returning to line 667, its value is input to a multiplier circuit 671 which receives an input from register 668 that provides a weighting value. In this embodiment, a weighting value can be used to increase or decrease the influence of the process number that results from either the difference circuit 665 or the process sensor register 678. Registers 668 receives an input on line 678 from the adaptive power management unit 622. The result of the multiplier circuit 671 is provided to the adding circuit 654. Line 640 also provides an input to a multiplier circuit 635 which receives a weighting value from the JR drop weight register 636. Like the process weight register 668, the JR drop weight register 636 receives an input on line 684 from the adaptive power management unit 622. The output of multiplier 635 is provided to the summing circuit 654 on line 652. The output from the summing circuit 654 is provided on line 650 to another multiplier 657, which is connected to a regulator weight register 660. This register, connected by line 682 to the adaptive power management unit allows program control of output of the scaling signal of the power supply itself. Therefore, by providing a weighting value in the register 660, the output on line 662 of the overall scaling circuitry can be regulated. Also in FIG. 6, there is a power supervisor circuit 627 which represents the interface to the computing system that permits for overall will control over this digital adaptive voltage supply through line 629 to the adaptive power management unit 622. The registers 600, 610, 676, 668, 660, 636, and 647 are read/write registers. Thus, the power supervisor 627 through the adaptive power management unit 622 can exercise total monitoring and regulation over the operation of the digital adaptive voltage supply.

FIG. 7 is a more detailed diagram of the block diagram of FIG. 6 further showing the Process Vt device threshold voltage shift. As the part ages, the Vt shifts for its devices resulting in slower performance. This register 712 connected to the differencing circuit 718 which stores. The Process Vt shift register 712 stores the pulse width value generated by the ring oscillator 744. As the part ages, for the same value of temperature and at bandgap voltage, the value written into this register will become larger indicating that the part is slowing down. By periodically comparing the value stored in this register with a pre-calculated pulse width value (estimated at 80% of the final pulse width achieved at End of Life for the part) for a given temperature, it can be determined when the part has reached the 80% point of its End of Life Vt shift and a signal will be generated indicating that this part may need to be replaced soon. In one embodiment, this register 712 is a read-only register where the value is written into the register based upon user control (i.e. a user can decide when the ring oscillator 744 pulse width data can be written into this register 712, but the user cannot write or overwrite the value of this register 712).

FIG. 8 is a diagram illustrated embodiment, where multiple CPU cores are located on a single semiconductor substrate 800. Each of the cores 802, 804, 806 and 808 are identical in this illustrated embodiment. However it should be apparent that the functionality of the cores is not relevant to the application of this invention as long as individual adaptive voltage supplies are located in each of the cores. In FIG. 8, the view of CPU core 804 is exploded into a view 810 that includes the CPU itself plus, on the surface of this core, an adaptive voltage supply 812 connected by a line 815 to a power supervisor 817. In operation, the power supervisor 817 represents the programmable control over all of the adaptive voltage supplies on all of the cores in the system. By using the registers discussed in FIGS. 6 and 7, the power supervisor 817 can control and monitor the operation of each adaptive voltage supply.

FIG. 9 is a flowchart illustrating the operation of the power supervisor in controlling the adaptive voltage supply. The thermal diode voltage is read in step 900 which is connected to the counter 922 that incrementally addresses the lookup table in step 925 to determine the measured temperature value which is provided to the differencing block 932 by line 979 which is also connected to the measured value register 980. Simultaneously, the first process sensing ring oscillator is read in block 928. This frequency with value is provided on line 932 to the write process shift register 926 and a difference circuit 932. Also simultaneously, the second process sensor ring oscillator circuit is read in block 940. Its output is provided on line 942 to the difference circuit 944 where the difference between the first and second ring oscillator circuits is provided on line 946.

FIG. 9 illustrates software control over the adaptive voltage supply previously discussed. Block 950 initiates the software or override capability through decision 954 from line 952. If a software or override is to take place, then the input measured IR drop value in block 962 would not be provided, but rather a software input value in block 960 would be provided over line 964 to the IR drop register 966.

In a similar manner, block 902 controls the process value that is used by the adaptive voltage supply. When a software control is implemented, a signal is provided on line 904 to the decision block 906. If an override by a software input is to take place, then the software input value in block 912 is provided by line 916 to the write process register 918 instead of the measured process of block 914. As shown, the inputted measured process value in block 914 is received via line 934 from the difference circuit 932 at this point. The software controls both the write process register in block 918 and the write IR drop register in block 966. Both the IR drop data and the process data are summed in block 936 to provide the overall voltage scaling signal that is output to the voltage regulator at 938 to provide the Vdd supply voltage to the integrated circuit.

Also in a similar manner, block 970 provides a user or software override in order to provide a substituted temperature value in place of the measured temperature value. This is done by providing a signal on line 974 to a decision process 972. If the software is to override the measured value, a signal is sent online 978, to access the software provided temperature value in block 982, which is written by line 984 into the write temperature register 986. However if there is no software override, the decision block 972 provides a signal on line 976 to the register 980 which receives the temperature from line 924 as previously discussed.

It should also be apparent to those skilled in the art that the use of weight registers also provides a greater degree of software control over the operation of the adaptive voltage supply. Therefore by accessing these registers, the power supervisor can both monitor and regulate the operation of each of the adaptive voltage supplies that are contained on the integrated circuit.

While this discussed embodiment shows only a single voltage control circuit on the integrated circuit, it should be apparent that multiple voltage control circuits may be utilized to provide different voltages to different portions of the integrated circuit.

Failure Prediction

Integrated circuits are considered to be highly reliable when compared to some previous electronic system components such as vacuum tubes. It is not unusual to expect integrated circuits to last over 100,000 hours. However, within the integrated circuit there are changes that do occur over time that result in irreversible loss of performance and eventually the integrated circuit failing, or being unable to provide its designed functionality. One indication of this is a shift of the threshold voltage Vt within the integrated circuit.

In the traditional power supplies (not adaptive power supplies), degradation is visible. However, in adaptive power supplies, this degradation is invisible because the power supply continually adapts to the changing conditions of its components up to a certain limit where the degradation is correctable. At some point the changes will be so large that the adaptive power supply will not be able to correct the degradation and a failure condition will occur. At this point, the integrated circuit has outlived its usefulness. Since previously, no problem has been detected, the failure can be a surprise. Therefore there is a need to indicate when the conditions of an integrated circuit are progressively degrading such that a failure of the power supply is imminent.

The adaptive power supply described herein is configured to adapt to degraded component performance. However, the design of this adaptive power supply also provides the capability to detect degradation of performance and to predict when a failure condition will occur. This is done by monitoring the effect of a degrading threshold voltage Vt.

FIG. 10 illustrates the process that monitors the raw pulse width value from the ring oscillator 722 744 (FIG. 7) as an indication of a threshold voltage Vt and is stored as Vt threshold voltage shift data in register 712 (FIG. 7). As Vt degrades over time, a higher power supply voltage is required to deliver the same performance. This Vt degradation results in a slower part and it is exhibited as an increase in pulse width generated by the ring oscillator.

Referring to FIG. 10, the process starts at 1102 with the initialization of a timer in block 1104 upon system start up. Next, when the timer expires, decision block 1106, the process continues to block 1108 to record Vt threshold shift data. As previously discussed, the Vt shift register has recorded the pulse width output from the ring oscillator 744 (FIG. 7) and this is recorded. The process determines if the timer has expired. If so, the process continues to block 1117 and, if not, continues to decision block 1114 where a check is made of the temperature. If the temperature has changed which is determined by a change in the address to the LUT 226 (FIG. 4), the process continues to block 1117. If not, the process proceeds to determine if the user is requesting a Vt degradation check in decision block 1116. If not, the process loops back to the beginning of decision block 1112 to wait for the timer to expire again. However if the user has requested a Vt degradation check of the threshold voltage Vt shift data, or as previously discussed, a temperature change has occurred or the timer has expired, the process continues to block 1117 were a current Vt data is recorded and then, in decision block 1118, it is determined if the Vt threshold voltage data has shifted more than a predetermined minimum or Minor Error value (which is actually a determination if the pulse width from ring oscillator 744 has changed more than a predetermined minimum value representing the Minor Error value). If not, the process loops back to the beginning of decision block 1112. However, if the threshold voltage shift data is greater than the Minimum Error value, the process continues to decision block 1120 to determine if this voltage shift data is greater than a predetermined Maximum Error value. If not, the process loops back to the beginning of decision block 1112. However if the threshold voltage data is greater than the Maximum Error value, then, in block 1122, the part is designated as a failed part and an indication is provided to the program and/or the user before the process ends at step 1124. Exceeding the Maximum Error value indicates that the circuit characteristics of the integrated circuit are significantly different than expected and a correction cannot be applied to reliably operate the integrated circuit within the desired performance range. At this point in a preferred embodiment, a flag is raised indicating that the part is nearing its end of life. The Maximum Error value for the error magnitude can be chosen such that it is about 80% to 90% of the maximum correction value achievable by the APS.

In FIG. 11, a second embodiment of the process of FIG. 10 is illustrated. This second embodiment would be appropriate where the adaptive power supply is continuously operating for a long period of time. The process in FIG. 11 is identical to the process in FIG. 10 through the second recording of the Vt shift data in block 1217 (identical to block 1117 in FIG. 10) and will not be discussed further. After block 1217, the process continues to block 1226 where the rate of change of the Vt data is determined. This is a computation that compares the current Vt data to the previous Vt data and divides by the passage of time between the two measurements (for example, a system clock maybe used to provide the time difference). Then a computation is made using the current Vt data and the rate of change to determine an estimate of when the Vt shift data will exceed the Max Error value. This estimate is then provided to the user. The process then continues to decision block 1218 which is identical to decision block 1118 in FIG. 10 and the remaining process in FIG. 11 is identical to the process in FIG. 10.

While particular embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that, based upon the teachings herein, that changes and modifications may be made without departing from this invention and its broader aspects. Therefore, the appended claims are to encompass within their scope all such changes and modifications as are within the true spirit and scope of this invention. Furthermore, it is to be understood that the invention is solely defined by the appended claims. It will be understood by those with skill in the art that if a specific number of an introduced claim element is intended, such intent will be explicitly recited in the claim, and in the absence of such recitation no such limitation is present. For non-limiting example, as an aid to understanding, the following appended claims contain usage of the introductory phrases “at least one” and “one or more” to introduce claim elements. However, the use of such phrases should not be construed to imply that the introduction of a claim element by the indefinite articles “a” or “an” limits any particular claim containing such introduced claim element to inventions containing only one such element, even when the same claim includes the introductory phrases “one or more” or “at least one” and indefinite articles such as “a” or “an”; the same holds true for the use in the claims of definite articles. 

1. An integrated circuit apparatus comprising: a bandgap constant reference voltage circuit located on the integrated circuit and providing a bandgap voltage; a frequency circuit connected to the bandgap voltage and providing a frequency signal, and a monitor circuit connected to measure a frequency pulse width of the frequency signal and to predict an integrated circuit failure upon determining a change of frequency pulse width measurements.
 2. An integrated circuit according to claim 1 wherein said frequency circuit is a ring oscillator connected to the bandgap voltage on the integrated circuit.
 3. An integrated circuit according to claim 2 wherein said monitor circuit includes a failure indication circuit to compare a stored frequency signal pulse width with a current measured frequency signal pulse width to indicate a failure of the integrated circuit.
 4. An integrated circuit comprising: a frequency circuit having a first ring oscillator connected to a bandgap voltage source located on the integrated circuit and providing a frequency signal, and a monitor circuit connected to monitor said frequency signal and having a register to periodically measure the frequency signal, a prediction circuit to compare a stored frequency signal with a current measured frequency signal to predict a failure of the integrated circuit and a failure detection circuit to determine if a failure condition has occurred in the integrated circuit, and a power supply circuit having: a thermal diode, an addressing circuit connected to a system clock, a digital temperature table connected to the addressing circuit, a comparator connected to the digital temperature table and to the thermal diode, a predicted frequency response table connected to the output of the digital temperature table and providing a predicted frequency response value, a second ring oscillator connected to a system voltage and providing a second frequency value, a first difference circuit connected to the frequency response table and the ring oscillator providing a first difference value of the frequency signal and the predicted frequency response value, a second difference circuit connected to the ring oscillator and the second ring oscillator and providing a second difference value of the frequency signal and the second frequency value, a voltage scaling signal circuit connected to the first and second difference circuits and providing a voltage scaling signal from a combination of the first and second difference values, and a voltage supply providing the system voltage to the electronic system in response to a voltage scaling signal received from the voltage scaling signal circuit.
 5. A method for predicting a failure condition in an integrated circuit comprising the steps of: measuring a pulse width of a frequency signal of a frequency circuit connected to a bandgap constant reference voltage circuit on the integrated circuit; comparing the measured pulse width of the frequency signal with a stored predicted pulse width frequency value to determine an amount of change; computing a trend change rate by comparing a current amount of change with a previously determined amount of change; and predicting a failure condition in the integrated circuit by computing from the trend change rate when a measured pulse width will exceed a maximum error value.
 6. A method according to claim 5 further including the step of determining if a failure condition has already occurred by determining if the measured pulse width change is greater than the maximum error value.
 7. A method according to claim 6 wherein said step of comparing further includes the step of determining if the measured pulse width of the frequency has changed more than a predetermined minimum error value from the stored predicted frequency value and, if not, discarding the measured pulse width of the frequency signal and waiting a predetermined time period or for a predefined event to occur before measuring a next pulse width of the frequency signal.
 8. A method according to claim 7 wherein said measuring step includes measuring the pulse width of an output from a ring oscillator of the frequency circuit connected to the bandgap voltage circuit located on the integrated circuit to provide the measured frequency signal.
 9. A method of managing a plurality of individual central processing units (CPUs) located on an integrated circuit, the method comprising the steps of: measuring a pulse width of a frequency signal of each individual CPU from a frequency circuit connected to a bandgap constant reference voltage circuit located on the integrated circuit adjacent to the individual CPU; comparing the measured pulse width of the frequency signal value with a previously stored pulse width frequency value of that CPU to determine an amount of change; computing a trend change rate by comparing a current amount of change with a previously determined amount of change; and predicting a failure condition for that CPU by computing from the trend change rate when a measured pulse width will exceed a maximum error value.
 10. A method according to claim 9 further including the step of determining if a failure condition has already occurred by determining if the measured pulse width change is greater than the maximum error value and reporting the failure by setting a flag bit in the CPU.
 11. A method according to claim 10 wherein said step of comparing further includes the step of determining if the measured pulse width of the frequency has changed more than a minimum value from the stored predicted pulse width of the frequency and, if not, discarding the measured pulse width of the frequency signal and waiting a predetermined time period or for a predefined event to occur before measuring a next pulse width of the frequency signal.
 12. A computer program product stored in a computer operable media, the computer operable media containing instructions for execution by a computer, which, when executed by the computer, cause the computer to implement a method for predicting a failure condition in an integrated circuit comprising the steps of: measuring a pulse width of the frequency signal of a frequency circuit connected to a bandgap constant reference voltage circuit on the integrated circuit; comparing the measured pulse width of the frequency signal with a stored predicted pulse width frequency value to determine an amount of change; computing a trend change rate by comparing a current amount of change with a previously determined amount of change; and predicting a failure condition in the integrated circuit by computing from the trend change rate when a measured pulse width will exceed a maximum error value.
 13. The computer program product of claim 12 further including the step of determining if a failure condition has already occurred by determining if the measured pulse width change is greater than the maximum error value.
 14. The computer program product of claim 13 wherein said step of comparing further includes the step of determining if the measured pulse width of the frequency has changed more than a minimum value from the stored predicted pulse width of the frequency and, if not, discarding the measured pulse width of the frequency and waiting a predetermined time period or for a predefined event to occur before measuring a next pulse width of the frequency.
 15. The computer program product of claim 14 wherein said measuring step includes measuring the pulse width of an output from a ring oscillator of the frequency circuit connected to the bandgap voltage circuit located on the integrated circuit to provide the measured pulse width of the frequency. 